{"title":"Did Proto-Chadic have velar nasals and prenasalised obstruents?","authors":"H. Wolff","doi":"10.15460/auue.2022.95.1.265","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Ever since the Afroasiatic affiliation of Chadic as a whole was suggested by Joseph H. Greenberg in his seminal re-classification of African languages since the 1950s and has been generally accepted, i.e. encompassing both ‘Chado-Hamitic’ and ‘Chadic’ languages of influential pre-Greenbergian genetic classifications, the issue of whether Proto-Chadic possessed prenasalised obstruents and velar nasals has been repeatedly raised and debated in the literature, yet without final consent. All of the 196 presently known Chadic languages would appear to possess these consonants in their synchronic phonemic inventories. The present article reviews the debate in view of recently available new insights on the historical phonology and lexical reconstruction based on data from 66 of the 79 known Central Chadic languages, i.e. the most numerous and most diverse branch of Chadic. According to these recent comparative studies of Central Chadic that allow to reconstruct Proto-Central Chadic phonology and lexicon, there is massive evidence to show that both velar nasals and prenasalised obstruents emerged as results of natural phonological processes probably already on the proto-language level, but need not be reconstructed for the proto-language’s phonemic inventory. And if Proto-Central Chadic did not have these consonants as inherited phonemes, then this would also be true for its predecessor, Proto-Chadic. The major processes leading to the emergence of velar nasals and prenasalised obstruents were segmental fusion and the emergence of prensalisation prosody that arose from the de-segmentalisation and prosodification of reconstructed nasals. The article summarises the evidence and gives illustrative examples for the reconstructed phonological processes, which created conditioned allophones that eventually became phonologised yielding synchronic phonemes in the modern Central Chadic languages.","PeriodicalId":80378,"journal":{"name":"Afrika und Ubersee","volume":"1 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2022-12-31","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Afrika und Ubersee","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.15460/auue.2022.95.1.265","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 1
Abstract
Ever since the Afroasiatic affiliation of Chadic as a whole was suggested by Joseph H. Greenberg in his seminal re-classification of African languages since the 1950s and has been generally accepted, i.e. encompassing both ‘Chado-Hamitic’ and ‘Chadic’ languages of influential pre-Greenbergian genetic classifications, the issue of whether Proto-Chadic possessed prenasalised obstruents and velar nasals has been repeatedly raised and debated in the literature, yet without final consent. All of the 196 presently known Chadic languages would appear to possess these consonants in their synchronic phonemic inventories. The present article reviews the debate in view of recently available new insights on the historical phonology and lexical reconstruction based on data from 66 of the 79 known Central Chadic languages, i.e. the most numerous and most diverse branch of Chadic. According to these recent comparative studies of Central Chadic that allow to reconstruct Proto-Central Chadic phonology and lexicon, there is massive evidence to show that both velar nasals and prenasalised obstruents emerged as results of natural phonological processes probably already on the proto-language level, but need not be reconstructed for the proto-language’s phonemic inventory. And if Proto-Central Chadic did not have these consonants as inherited phonemes, then this would also be true for its predecessor, Proto-Chadic. The major processes leading to the emergence of velar nasals and prenasalised obstruents were segmental fusion and the emergence of prensalisation prosody that arose from the de-segmentalisation and prosodification of reconstructed nasals. The article summarises the evidence and gives illustrative examples for the reconstructed phonological processes, which created conditioned allophones that eventually became phonologised yielding synchronic phonemes in the modern Central Chadic languages.
自20世纪50年代以来,约瑟夫·h·格林伯格(Joseph H. Greenberg)在他对非洲语言的开创性重新分类中提出了乍得语作为一个整体的非亚裔关系,并被普遍接受,即包括有影响力的前格林伯格遗传分类的“查多-哈米特语”和“查迪奇语”,关于原始乍得语是否具有前鼻阻塞和舌鼻的问题在文献中被反复提出和辩论,但没有最终同意。目前已知的所有196种乍得语在其共时音位表中似乎都有这些辅音。本文回顾了最近关于查得语历史音系和词汇重建的新见解,这些新见解基于79种已知的查得语中66种语言的数据,即查得语中数量最多、种类最多的分支。根据最近对中部汉语语音学和词汇的比较研究,有大量证据表明,腭鼻音和前鼻音障碍都是自然语音过程的结果,可能已经在原始语言水平上出现,但不需要重建原始语言的音位清单。如果原中央乍得语没有这些辅音作为继承的音素,那么它的前身原乍得语也是如此。导致瓣状鼻塞和鼻前化梗阻的主要过程是由重建鼻塞的去节段化和元音化引起的节段融合和鼻前化韵律的出现。文章总结了证据,并给出了重建音系过程的例子,这一过程创造了条件音素,最终在现代中央乍得语言中成为音系化的共时音素。